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Category: Multimedia

10/03/2008 GMT 1

Compiz and Compiz Fusion 0.7.2. released

ubuntuland @ 16:56

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I'm pleased to announce the release of Compiz Fusion 0.7.2.

This is the first development release of Compiz Fusion 0.7 series, which will
be the basis for the stable 0.8.0 release. This release is based on Compiz 0.7.2
and requires some features that weren't in Compiz 0.7.0.

Please note that we decided to skip 0.7.0 to keep in sync with Compiz version
numbers to reduce confusion as much as possible.

The Compiz Fusion 0.7.2 tarballs are available at
http://releases.compiz-fusion.org/0.7.2/ . You can verify these tarballs
using the sha1sums in
http://releases.compiz-fusion.org/0.7.2/compiz-fusion-0.7.2.sha1 , which are
signed by Compiz Fusion Release Team GPG key (C2B8F46E) at
http://releases.compiz-fusion.org/0.7.2/compiz-fusion-0.7.2.sha1.asc . The
matching Compiz Core tarball is available in the compiz/ subdirectory.

We've added a lot of new features and fixed a lot of bugs, but it's too much
to write everything down here.

compiz_fusion_logo.png


New Plugins:
compiz-fusion-plugins-main:
- session: Communicates with session manager to save/restore window state
- bs: Change window brightness and saturation with key/button bindings
- mousepoll: Provides a generic system for other plugins to get the current
mouse position
- mag: Provides a magnifying glass under the mouse pointer with 3 different
display modes (simple/image overlay/fisheye)

compiz-fusion-plugins-extra:
- 3d: Adds depth to your desktop by raising windows in layers off the cube
- loginout: Provides a simple system to implement login and logout animations
- maximumize: Resizes a window to fit within the available empty screen space
- notification: Displays error messages on the screen with libnotify
- shelf: Shrinks a window to a preset size for monitoring many windows at once
- showmouse: Paints particle emitters that orbit the mouse pointer to make it
more visible

compiz-fusion-plugins-unsupported:
- atlantis: Renders an aquarium inside of the transparent cube

Configuration manager changes:
ccsm:
- Action settings were split into button, key, and edge settings, each using
its own widget.
- Match settings can be edited with a simple editor that supports easy
grabbing of window properties
- Advanced Search page was improved
- New icons for some plugins
- Minor adaptations and fixes

simple-ccsm:
New settings manager focused on simplicity and aimed at end users

Compiz Fusion is entirely developed as a volunteer project, and we'd like
to thank everyone who contributed to this release. Translators, testers,
the support team and developers: thank you, your continuous contributions
made it all possible.

We hope you will enjoy using Compiz Fusion as much as we enjoyed writing it!

- - The Compiz Fusion Team

Compiz Fusion is a collection of plugins and a configuration system for the Compiz compositing window manager for the X Window System. Compiz Fusion is the result of a merge between the old Compiz community plugin set "Compiz Extras" and the parts of the Beryl project that are independent of the window manager core.

The aim of the project is to port almost all of the features of Beryl to Compiz plugins, and continue to write further Compiz plugins. At the same time, Beryl has been discontinued and Compiz will add some of the core changes made by Beryl to the Compiz core.

Main Plugins

* Animation
* Color filter
* Expo
* Enhanced Zoom Desktop
* JPEG
* Negative
* Opacify
* Put
* Resize info
* Ring Switcher
* Shift Switcher
* Scale Addons
* Snapping Windows
* Text
* Window Previews
* Viewport Switcher
* Desktop Wall
* Window Rules
* Workarounds

Extra Plugins:

* ADD Helper
* Benchmark
* Crash handler
* Cube Caps
* Cube Reflection
* Extra WM Actions
* Fade to Desktop
* Firepaint
* Cube Gears
* Group and Tab Windows
* Motion blur
* Reflection
* Scale Window Title Filter
* Show desktop
* Splash
* Trailfocus
* Widget Layer

Unsupported Plugins:

* Fake ARGB
* Snow
* Mouse Switch
* Tile

Experimental Plugins:

* Screensaver
* Compiz-Scheme
* Sound
* Visual Event
* 3D Windows
* Cube Atlantis
* Freewins
* Anaglyph

Software release life cycle

A software release is the distribution, whether public or private, of an initial or new and upgraded version of a computer software product. Each time a software program or system is changed, the software engineers and company doing the work decide on how to distribute the program or system, or changes to that program or system. Software patches are one method of distributing the changes, as are downloads and compact discs.

The software release life cycle is composed of different stages that describe the stability of a piece of software and the amount of development it requires before final release. Each major version of a product usually goes through a stage when new features are added, or the alpha stage; a stage when it is being actively debugged, or the beta stage; and finally a stage when all important bugs have been removed, or the stable stage. Intermediate stages may also be recognized. The stages may be formally announced and regulated by the project's developers, but sometimes the terms are used informally to describe the state of a product. Conventionally, code names are often used by many companies for versions prior to the release of the product, though the actual product and features are rarely secret.

compiz_alpha.png

 

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26/01/2008 GMT 1

Ubuntu Media Players OverView

ubuntuland @ 09:05

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I want to give the list of media players available for ubuntu users with installation instructions.

Beep Media Player

MP, or Beep Media Player, is a compact media player that was originally forked from XMMS with the goal of porting XMMS
to GTK2 and make use of more modern desktop standards. The original XMMS is based on GTK 1.2, which is now deprecated for roughly 4 years, and was deprecated at the time of the fork for approximately 2 years. This, and the fact that the developers were developing XMMS under a mostly cathedral-style model led M. Derezynski to fork BMP from XMMS.

Current Stable Version :- 0.9.7.1

Project Home Page :- http://bmp.beep-media-player.org/index.php/BMP_Homepage

Install Beep Media Player in Ubuntu

sudo aptitude install beep-media-player

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video—>Beep Media Player

Once it opens you should see the following screen

Banshee

Import, organize, play, and share your music using Banshee’s simple, powerful interface.Rip CDs, play and sync your iPod, create playlists, and burn audio and MP3 CDs. Most portable music devices are supported.Banshee also has support for podcasting, smart playlists, music recommendations, and much more.

Current Stable Version :- 0.11.5

Project Home Page :- http://bmp.beep-media-player.org/index.php/BMP_Homepage

Install Banshee in Ubuntu

sudo aptitude install banshee

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video— >Banshee Music Player

Banshee Music Player is loading

Once it opens you should see the following screen

Banshee Music Player Version Details

Rhythmbox

Rhythmbox is an integrated music management application, originally inspired by Apple’s iTunes. It is free software,designed to work well under the GNOME Desktop, and based on the powerful GStreamer media framework.

Current Stable Version :- 0.9

Project Home Page :- http://www.gnome.org/projects/rhythmbox/

Install rhythmbox in Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install rhythmbox

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video—
>Rhythmbox Music Player

Once it opens you should see the following screen

Rhythmbox Music Player Version Details

Listen

Listen is a Music player and management for GNOME Features: metadata edition, ipod management, audioscrobbler, wikipedia information, lyrics, global statistiques, burn and AudioCD, convert audio file, webradio, lastfm web service, download album cover.

Current Stable Version :- 0.5b1

Project Home Page :- http://listengnome.free.fr/

Install Listen Music Player in Ubuntu

For Dapper Users

Edit the /etc/apt/sources.list file

sudo vi /etc/apt/sources.list

add the following lines save and exit the file.

deb http://theli.free.fr/packages/ dapper listen

deb-src http://theli.free.fr/packages/ dapper listen

Now you need to update the source list using the following command

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install listen

For Edgy Users

You need to make sure that universe repositories and use the following command

sudo apt-get install listen

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video—
>Listen Music Player

Listen Music Player is loading

Once it opens you should see the following screen


Listen Music Player Version Details


XMMS

XMMS is a multimedia player for unix systems. XMMS stands for X MultiMedia System and can play media files such as
MP3, MOD’s, WAV and others with the use of Input plugins.XMMS is mainly targeted at music playback, but through thirdparty plugins some rudimentary video capabilities exists,but there are much better systems other than XMMS for video support.

Current Stable Version :- 1.2.0

Project Home Page :- http://www.xmms.org/

Install xmms in Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install xmms

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video—
>XMMS Music Player

Once it opens you should see the following screen

quod libet

Quod Libet is a GTK+-based audio player application written using the Python programming language. Its main design
goal is to provide a way for users to organize their music library however they want.One of Quod Libet’s unique features is the ability to search and construct playlists based on search terms or regularexpressions. It also scales well, making it ideal for music libraries with thousands of songs. Quod Libet includes a tag editor (also available separately as Ex Falso) which can alter the metadata of groups of files.

Current Stable Version :- 0.24

Install quodlibet in Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install quodlibet

This will complete the installation.Now if you want to access this application go to Applications—>Sound&Video—
>Quod Libet

Once it opens you should see the following screen

quod libet Music Player Version Details

 

Related post to: Multimedia
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14/01/2008 GMT 1

Ubuntu Multimedia Center, a new Ubuntu based Linux distribution

ubuntuland @ 12:55

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Ubuntu Multimedia Center is a complete Linux-based operating system, freely available with community and professional support.It is also a live cd that is ubuntu derived and also free. This system was inspired by the fact that ubuntu didn’t have much of a multimedia center.Because users would have to manually download the codecs for playing mp3’s and what not.The mail objective of this project is multimedia related programs available to users as easy as possible.
Ubuntu Multimedia center Installation

First you need to download Ubuntu Multimedia version from here after that youcreate a CD and start booting with the CD Once it starts booting you should see the following screen in this you need to select second option “Install to the Hard disk Option” and press enter.

Let's have a look at some of the installed software:

• Alacarte Menu Editor
• The Gimp Image Editor
• gThumb Image Viewer
• XSane Image Scanner
• aMSN Instant Messenger
• Mozilla Firefox Web Browser
• Gaim Instant Messenger
• AbiWord Word Processor
• Totem Movie Player
• Ogle DVD Player
• Rhythmbox Music Player
• Serpentine Audio CD Creator
• Sound Juicer CD Extractor
• VLC Media Player
• Synaptic Package Manager
• ...and a lot of GNOME games like: Ataxx, Klotski, Mahjongg, Mines, Nibbles, Tali, etc.

Now you can see Ubuntu Multimedia Center starts booting

Once it comple loading you can see the desktop with the following screen here you need to click on install to start the installation.

Here you need to select your installation language and click on forward.

Select a city in your country and time zone.In this example i am using london city and uk as country and click on forward.

Select your keyboad layout and in this example i am using British English and click on forward

You need to enter username,password and computer name here and click on forward

It will start the partitioner here you need to select how do you want to partition the disk and select which option is suitable for you in this example i am selecting “manually edit partition table” and click on forward

Now you can See the following screen with the disks available in your machine here you need to create partitions for this you need to select the available free space and in this example you can see the 8GB of space for this installation here i am going create a partitions for this right click and click on new.

Once you select new you should see the following screen asking for creating disklable and by default gparted will create msdos disklabel and click on create

Confirm msdos label on disk here by clicking on create

Once you create the lable on the disk your disk is ready for creating partitions you can do this by clicking on new

Once you click on New you can see the following screen here you can select new size,partition type and click on add.Inthis example i am entering size as 100 mb and partition type as ext3 and tick the check box next to round the cylinder option.

In the same way i have entered remaining available space and click on add

Here you can see the two created partitions and click on forward

Confirm the pending operations by clicking on apply

Applying pending operations in progress

Here you need to create a mount points by selecting mount point and partition and click on forward

Here is the all the list of information for available for installation here you need to click on install to start the installation.

Installation in progress and it shows the copying files percentage.

Installation Completed Succesfully and you need to restart the system by clicking “Restart Now”

Ubuntu Multimedia center Screenshots

If you want to see some of the screenshots tour for ubuntu multi media center you can click on the image for complete gallery

04/01/2008 GMT 1

Subdownloader is a free open source tool for videofiles subtitles

ubuntuland @ 11:11

Subdownloader is a Free Open Source tool written in PYTHON for automatic download/upload subtitles for videofiles (DIVX,MPEG,AVI,etc) and DVD's using fast hashing.

Features:

  • No spyware, no adware, source code is available
  • It uses fast hashing algorithm (27 GB movies/7 seconds)
  • Search subtitles recursively from your divx folders
  • Upload entire series seasons subtitles in less than 1 minute
  • Autodetect language of the subtitles and many more features

License: GNU General Public License v3
Labels: subtitles, video, mp4, dvd, divx

Join project

Project owners:
capiscuas
Project members:

sethts, opensubtitles


linux_installation

How to install and run SubDownloader on GNU/Linux

Requisites

  • python 2.5
  • python-wxgtk2.8 (.deb)
  • python-imdbpy
  • python-mmpython

Download last sources

Download and uncompress the last 1.2.9 sources from here

Run #python Subdownloader.py

SubdownloaderSubdownloaderSubdownloader

Subdownloader is a tool written in PYTHON for automatic download/upload subtitles for videofiles (DIVX,MPEG,AVI,etc) and DVD's using fast hashing. No more Website searches required.

Subdownloader is a Free Open Source tool written in PYTHON for automatic download/upload subtitles for videofiles (DIVX,MPEG,AVI,etc) and DVD's using fast hashing.

Features:

* No spyware, no adware, source code is available
* It uses fast hashing algorithm (27 GB movies/7 seconds)
* Search subtitles recursively from your divx folders
* Upload entire series seasons subtitles in less than 1 minute
* Autodetect language of the subtitles and many more features




Web site : http://code.google.com/p/subdownloader/

Country : Viet Nam

Licence : GPL v3

Project leader : Ivan Garcia

Target audience : V.O Movies-Series Fans who needs subtitles.

Similar projects : None. It's a brand new idea saving the time of many people willing to find their subtitles easily.

Want to contribute ?

Needed contributions : Code and Documentation.

Number of developpers : 1

Project mailing-list :http://forum.opensubtitles.org/viewtopic.php?p=525

Public CVS/SVN :http://code.google.com/p/subdownloader/source

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31/12/2007 GMT 1

Medibuntu, Multimedia, Entertainment & Distractions In Ubuntu

ubuntuland @ 08:23
http://img505.imageshack.us/img505/2350/medbuntusu8.png

Medibuntu (Multimedia, Entertainment & Distractions In Ubuntu) is a repository of packages that cannot be included into the Ubuntu distribution for legal reasons (copyright, license, patent, etc).

Medibuntu is a packaging project dedicated to distributing software that cannot be included in Ubuntu for various reasons, related to geographical variations in legislation regarding intellectual property, security and other issues:

  • patentability of software, algorithms, formats and other abstract creation
  • legal restrictions on freedom of speech or communication
  • restrictions on the use of certain types of technical solution, such as cryptography
  • legal restrictions on imports of software technology, requiring for example specific permissions
  • etc.

A lot of excellent free software and non-free software is affected by such restriction somewhere in the world, thus preventing its inclusion into Ubuntu that, for economy and simplicity, are generally identical for all countries.

We refuse to resign ourselves to abandoning software that may be legally useful somewhere, and we have chosen to provide it with professional quality packaging, easily usable within the context of Ubuntu.
This repository provides packages for Ubuntu distribution.

It is your legal responsibility to make sure that the software you are installing can be legally used in your country and for your intended purpose.

27/11/2007 GMT 1

TiMidity++, open source MIDI to WAVE converter and player

ubuntuland @ 14:41

L'immagine “http://timidity.s11.xrea.com/images/ss_mainwindow.png” non può essere visualizzata poiché contiene degli errori.

TiMidity++ is an open source MIDI to WAVE converter and player. It uses Gravis Ultrasound-compatible patch files and/or SoundFont Banks to generate digital audio data from general MIDI files. The audio data can be played through any sound device or stored on disk.

On a fast machine, music can be played in real time. TiMidity++ is written in C and runs under Linux, FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS, MacOSX, and Win32, and porting to other systems with gcc should be easy.

The original version of this program was written by Tuukka Toivonen <tt@cgs.fi> (he discontinued development because he was too busy with work). Since then, Masanao Izumo and others have begun to improve it, and now TiMidity++ has officially been released.

Things distributed here are experimental versions of TiMidity++, that may not be stable, but have much enhanced functions.

Download: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/timidity/ TiMidity++-2.13.2.tar.bz2

T2 source: timidity++.conf
T2 source: timidity++.desc
T2 source: timidity++.cache

Build time (on reference hardware): 40% (relative to binutils)2

Installed size (on reference hardware): 0.94 MB, 19 files

Dependencies (build time detected): alsa-lib bash binutils bzip2 cf coreutils diffutils emacs expat findutils fontconfig freetype gcc glibc grep imake lesstif libelf libice libsm libx11 libxau libxdmcp libxext libxft libxmu libxp libxpm libxrender libxt linux-header make mktemp net-tools sed sysfiles tar util-linux xaw3d xextproto xproto zlib

1) This page was automatically generated from the T2 package source. Corrections, such as dead links, URL changes or typos need to be performed directly on that source.

2) Compatible with Linux From Scratch's "Standard Build Unit" (SBU).

TiMidity++ interfaces



XAW interface

Basic XAW interface

XAW interface, can be invoked from timidity -ia, is a popular interface uses X Athena Widgets. If you have libXaw3d installed, TiMidity++ would use it instead.

customize

As you know, you can customize the look and feel of any xaw applcations by writing .xdefaults. The default setting is in the TiMidity++ source tarballs.

Here's another example of XAW interface, by Chisato Yamauchi. This is a good example of customized look and feels.



GTK+ interface

GTK+ interface is a simple interface using GTK+ widgets. This interface acts just as the same as other GTK applications. If you get used to GTK+, this interface would be a easy-to-use.

Invoke it as timidity -ig, or this interfce is default when argv[0] is "gtkmidi".



VT100 interface

VT100 interface is not a graphical user interface, but an interface to run TiMidity in the console window.

Maybe most people prefer ncurses interface than this, because ncurses interface is much more powerful. so why this is here? well, the fact is, my machine cannot run ncurses interface. :(



Emacs interface

Emacs interface is somewhat different from other interfaces. It is for people don't want to leave emacs at all. After installing timidity, you can invoke this by typing M-x timidity from emacs.



Motif interface

timidity -im or "xmmidi" invokes Motif interface, which is available for people bought Motif. But, hey, you can use lesstif instead.

23/11/2007 GMT 1

Open-source software rated: Ten alternatives you need

ubuntuland @ 09:17

Open source products comprise the work of many collaborators -- sometimes thousands of them, and often separated by oceans. Each person works on small portions of a project, and anyone is welcome to contribute. The finished product will be available freely for anyone to download and, in most cases, modify.

All very touchy-feely, carey-sharey, but why should you care about open source? You should care because the vast majority of common applications, even complex commercial stuff such as Adobe Photoshop, Windows Media Player and Microsoft Office, have free, open-source alternatives. And this point is worth reiterating: open-source software is free. No cost. Zero. Zilch.

We've put together a collection of ten free open-source applications that will potentially save you hundreds of pounds. We've outlined their pros and cons and compared them to the nearest commercial alternative

Paid-for version: Microsoft Office
Open-source alternative: OpenOffice

OpenOffice is a feature-packed alternative to Microsoft Office. It's developed by Sun Microsystems in collaboration with a community of dedicated contributors. The primary applications of OpenOffice consist Writer (word processor), Calc (spreadsheet), Impress (presentations), Base (databases), Draw (vector graphics editor) and Math (mathematical formulae editor, similar to Microsoft Equation Editor).

The good: For home users and families it offers everything you'll need to write letters, publish documents, formulate graphs, build slideshows and design simple Web pages. It looks and works like Microsoft Word and because it's free, it'll save you about £119 -- the cost of Microsoft Office 2007. For families, OpenOffice is an absolute must.

The bad: Microsoft Office comes with Outlook, which is vital for most business users. For this reason, OpenOffice isn't an alternative to Microsoft's corporate solutions. It's also lacks some of the advanced design functions of the 2007 version of Word.

Conclusion: OpenOffice will be perfect for most home users. Business users will almost certainly need Outlook, though OO may still provide all the functionality needed for word processing and spreadsheet work.

Download it here: openoffice.org

Paid-for version: Microsoft Windows Media Centre
Open-source alternative: MediaPortal

MediaPortal is an open-source alternative to Microsoft's Media Centre and offers PVR functionality as well as management of all your videos, photos, music and radio stations. It runs on Windows and has the ability to display RSS feeds and weather information. The attractive GUI can be re-skinned with loads of free and professional-looking skins and a vast array of plugins written by the community extend functionality in loads of ways.

The Good: It's an extremely easy piece of software to use and looks and feels just like Windows Media Centre. For use as a living-room PVR and a media handler it's superb. More advanced users will appreciate the many layers of customisability offered, too. High-definition content is fully compatible as long as your PC is up to the job, so wiring your box up to that shiny new HDTV will be no problem.

The Bad: The software suffers a few bugs that could be something of a hurdle for newbies. It's in the advanced pre-release stages, meaning the team developing it hasn't deemed it suitable for general release, but it's well on its way. More tech-savvy users will work around any bugs they uncover, but technophobes may want to stick to Media Centre until a final release has been made.

Conclusion: MediaPortal is ideal for anyone who isn't afraid of looking at a program's preferences screen. If looking at settings confuses and scared you into a dark corner, stick with Microsoft's Media Centre for now. Otherwise, go grab yourself MediaPortal, because it's bloody marvellous.

Download it here: team-mediaportal.com

Paid-for version: Windows Media Player
Open-source alternative: VLC media player

VLC is an exceptionally functional media player that not only handles almost any media format you throw at it, but will stream stuff from the Web and play your DVDs. It's also a great tool for anyone who downloads large video files, since VLC can play incomplete or damaged media.

The Good: For the home and for the office, VLC will work for you. If you use Windows, Mac OS X, Linux or BeOS, VLC will work for you. Almost regardless of what media formats you use, VLC will work for you. If you're an absolute newbie to computers, VLC will work for you. Do you see where we're going with this?

The Bad: VLC won't let you sync your media library with your new MP3 player. True, Windows Media Player doesn't work with an iPod anyway, and the vast majority of other models that claim to need WMP will actually let you drag and drop your content into their memory through Windows Explorer anyway. There are no radio services directly available through VLC, so if the integration of these services is important to you, you might still want to have WMP sticking around in the background.

Conclusion: For almost all uses, VLC will suit the beginner and the amateur. The experts will already be using it. There are loads of skins available to make it look much prettier than it is by default, and its undeniably superb functionality makes it a crucial download for any computer user.

Download it here: videolan.org/vlc

Paid-for version: WinZip
Open-source alternative: 7-Zip

7-Zip is a file archiver that handles not only its own file compression format, but also the common .zip format, meaning it's ideal for everyday home and office use. It'll also unzip other popular archiving formats such as RAR, CAB and ISO. 7-Zip can be integrated into the Windows Shell for easy right-clicking compression of desktop files and folders.

The Good: Zipping and unzipping .zip files is the main function of the popular commercial application WinZip. 7-Zip performs this task without requiring any purchases. For this reason, it's a solid alternative for most people. It's also capable of encrypting archives for that added peace of mind.

The Bad: WinZip offers a vast array of features for advanced users, such as intelligent compression, which chooses the most efficient archiving method based on the type of files being compressed. WinZip will also let you schedule backups and periodic and automatic updating of existing backup archives.

Conclusion: Home users won't use most of the features in WinZip, so 7-Zip is highly recommended. It's lightweight, easy to use and will let you send batches of photos to friends as well as back up archives to DVDs.

Download it here: 7-zip.org

Paid-for version: Adobe Photoshop
Open-source alternative: GIMP

GIMP is a package for creating digital images and manipulating photographs. It's been in production for 12 years and is compatible with most of the commonly used image formats such as JPG, TIFF, PNG, BMP and GIF, as well as most Adobe Photoshop and PaintShop Pro files.

The Good: It's no secret that many people download illegal copies of the enormously feature-packed Adobe Photoshop purely for cropping and resizing photos. GIMP takes care of this task without the risk of lawsuits. It's also got an array of tools for creating original raster graphics. The whole colour spectrum can be used with existing brushes or user-created ones, an array of filters and effects can be applied -- drop shadow being a popular choice. Once you've had some practice it's very easy to use and quickly proves itself to be a capable image editor.

The Bad: GIMP doesn't offer the extensive design and manipulation options that the £500 industry-standard Photoshop offers, though it has never aimed to. There really isn't any bad side to GIMP, considering what it's capable of doing. If you're used to editing images in Windows Paint, you'll need to spend a few hours getting to know it, but that's true with all applications that aren't aimed at children and the artistically backwards.

Conclusion: There's no need to illegally download spend £500 on Photoshop if all you're doing is resizing images, applying fancy effects and cropping photos, because GIMP is extremely capable at these tasks. If you're looking for a career in design however, you might still want to keep saving for the Adobe standard.

Download it here: gimp.org

Commercial version: Google Reader, Bloglines
Open-source alternative: RSSOwl

RSSOwl is a simple and lightweight desktop feed reader. It offers multiple viewing options and easy importing of XML files.

The good: The 'Owl offers an uncluttered interface that allows easy navigation of multiple feeds. A Web browser is built in, so there's no need to leave the application to click through the Web sites. The application itself is extremely fast and very friendly, though rather basic, aesthetically. There's a feature that lets you enter a Web site's URL and RSSOwl will scour it for RSS feeds, which can then be imported with the click of a button. It's even possible to export all feed entries to PDF form for easy offline reading.

The bad: The built-in Web browser is Internet Explorer, raising the usual security issues common to IE.

Conclusion: Since you need to be online to use an RSS reader properly, RSSOwl is a great application. The ability to export feed items to offline documents could be a huge bonus over Web-based apps such as Google Reader.

Download it here: rssowl.org

Commercial version: Windows Live Messenger, AIM, Yahoo! Messenger
Open-source alternative: Pidgin

Pidgin combines the IM functionality of popular IM clients such as Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo Messenger into one lightweight application. This allows for seamless use of multiple clients and address books from the comfort of a single window.

The good: On computers with limited RAM, Pidgin does away with the need for multiple individual clients, which can greatly increase available memory. Multiple chat networks can be used simultaneously so there's no restriction on what networks you're connected to at any given time. It'll run on all the popular operating systems and a text-based alternative is available for anyone wanting to use the program within a console window.

The bad: It's not as attractive as the standard IM chat clients and it's not blindingly obvious which contacts are part of each network.

Conclusion: If you'd like all your contacts in one place, Pidgin is a superb option. Its functionality is flawless and features such as emoticons and file transfers are seamlessly integrated. It's not a particularly attractive program though, so if aesthetics are important to you, you might want to stick to separate chat clients.

Download it here: pidgin.im

Paid version: Nero Burning Rom
Open source alternative: InfraRecorder

InfraRecorder is an open-source alternative to commercial CD- and DVD-burning software. It was first developed during Google's Summer of Code in 2006. It uses a standard graphical interface for creating disc images and an express creation wizard that helps guide you through the process.

The good: InfraRecorder is a really capable piece of software that allows you to burn all the usual kinds of CD and DVD types. It also supports the creation of dual-layer DVDs and the burning of ISO and BIN images. We got perfect results from discs burned with the software and had no trouble using it from start to finish.

The bad: The interface is quite basic and not as accessible to less tech-savvy users. More sophisticated and well-designed wizards in programs such as Nero are better at easing newbies through the creation process. The program is also a little slow when preparing to burn a disc.

Conclusion: If you're used to manually creating DVDs and CDs, InfraRecorder is perfect. It worked flawlessly for us and produced great results. Technophobes, however, will prefer the idiot-proof wizards provided by commercial software bundled with pre-built PCs.

Download it here: infrarecorder.sourceforge.net

Paid-for version: Adobe Audition
Open-source alternative: Audacity

Audacity is a digital audio editor and mixing platform, complete with a graphical user interface and cross-platform OS support. It's one of the most popular open-source downloads in the world.

The good: One of the most common uses of the program is audio file conversion, as it handles a wide range of audio formats, including FLAC and OGG. It's easy to record, cut and edit sounds, remove noise, adjust levels and alter equaliser settings. An array of plugins allow you to extend core functionality, such as overlaying sound effects and samples. Audacity is a superb package for home users who want more control over their audio than the super-awesome-amazing Sound Recorder that comes with Windows allows.

The bad: While it's superbly kitted out for home users and podcasters, it can't match commercial products like Adobe's Audition software for studio recording. The GUI is also rather plain and not as easy to read as some paid-for alternatives.

Conclusion: Be prepared for a steep learning curve, but rest assured it'll pay off. Audacity offers a great set of features and is suited for loads of purposes. If you're setting up a home studio, you'll want to look for something vastly more capable. But for anyone who just needs to record, cut, manipulate and export, it's a killer.

Download it here: audacity.sourceforge.net

Paid-for version: Internet Explorer
Open-source alternative: Mozilla Firefox

You didn't think we'd forget the 'Fox, did you? With over 400 million downloads and counting, the Firefox Web browser is more popular than even the most downloaded application of all time on SourceForge.net, eMule. It has snagged almost 15 per cent of the global browser market as of October 2007, translating to roughly 110 million global users.

The good: Firefox is commonly referred to as the most secure Web browser available. With a massive team of worldwide developers and contributors, holes and bugs can be patched and pushed out with extraordinary speed. Thousands of extensions are available, too, which are simple ways to add functionality to the browser. Tabbed browsing lets you have multiple Web sites open within a single browser window without cluttering the Windows taskbar. There's also an integrated download manager, RSS management and an integrated search bar for hundreds of Web sites.

The bad: Firefox can sometimes devour a system's RAM, though this is reportedly the result of certain extensions and plugins. It can also take a few seconds longer to load a page than Opera or Internet Explorer.

Conclusion: There is no reason not to use Firefox. It is the best, most configurable browser available. If you're used to Internet Explorer, you'll find the switch to Firefox painless. It looks similar and offers the same 'back, forward, stop, refresh' functionality, but offers as many extra features as you care to get hold of. If you're not using it, you're missing out.

Download it here: mozilla.com/firefox


13/11/2007 GMT 1

Sound Converter for Gnome

ubuntuland @ 08:58

Sound Converter

Introduction

The sound conversion application for the GNOME environment. It reads anything the GStreamer library can read (Ogg Vorbis, AAC, MP3, FLAC, WAV, AVI, MPEG, MOV, M4A, AC3, DTS, ALAC, MPC, Shorten, APE, SID, etc...), and writes WAV, FLAC, MP3, and Ogg Vorbis files.

News

Version 0.9.7

  • New translations: Russian, Spanish, Italian, German, Czech.
  • Association with audio mimetypes, so SoundConverter is just at a right click.
  • The program can now takes URIs as arguments.
  • Add Folder now also work on non-local files.
  • Added {Genre}, {Date} and {Year} in custom filename patterns.
  • Better replace-messy-chars, with unicode->ascii to remove diacritics.
  • Fixed crashing when tags contained a list.
  • Fixed escaping problem in same-folder-as-input. (again)
  • License is now GPLv3.

Download

Download page
report any problem/suggestion on the project page

Screenshots

Requirements

Linux, GNOME 2.x, Python, PyGTK, GStreamer, GStreamer-python, Gnome-python, GStreamer-lame for MP3 output.

See this howto to enable mp3 encoding.

License

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License.

Authors

Maintainer: Gautier Portet
Previous maintainer: Lars Wirzenius

Translators: Guillaume Bedot, Dominik Zabłotny, Jonh Wendell, Marc E., Daniel Nylander, Alexandre Prokoudine, Kamil Páral, Stefano Luciani, Martin Seifert, Miloš Popović.

Thanks to: Hanno Böck, Regis Floret, Adolfo González Blázquez, Julien Gascard, Claudio Saavedra, Ken Harris, Jon Arnold, Major Kong, Tango Project.

And big thanks to you all; users, fans, bug reporters, translators... YOU make this possible!

10/11/2007 GMT 1

Gimmix, graphical music player

ubuntuland @ 22:52

Gimmix

Gimmix is a graphical music player daemon (MPD) client written in C using GTK+2. It's very simple and easy to use, yet offers many features to make your audio experience a pleasant one.

Gimmix playlist Gimmix main window

Features:

  • Simple and clean interface.
  • Compact and full view modes.
  • Library Browser.
  • Library Search (Search by Artist, Album, Filename etc)
  • Playlist management (manage mpd playlists)
  • ID3v2 Tag editing support.
  • Support for controlling gimmix through keyboard
  • System tray icon support.
  • Notification support (Displays the currently playing song in systray).
  • Small memory footprint.

Latest Version: 0.4.2

License: GNU General Public License

Author: Priyank M. Gosalia

Audio players for Linux have come a long way since graphical desktop environments were made available. Over the years, more and more audio players were released, while the old ones were constantly being updated. Now, it's pretty hard to choose from a very large number of players, each with its own features, advantages and disadvantages.

Gimmix, however, is not an ordinary audio player. It requires a lot more than running it and pressing the play button to listen to music. Gimmix is just a front-end to MPD (music player daemon), which will require to be installed, configured and started in order for Gimmix to run properly. MPD is basically a server which allows remote access for playing audio files, streams and managing playlists. What's really impressive about this design is that the client used for controlling the server doesn't need to run on the same machine MPD runs on. This enables you to play the music files on your home server from work, a friend's house or wherever, as long as you have Gimmix with you.

Gimmix is a quite new player, it was first released in October this year and in about a month, has reached a development level most players don't touch for another year. Installing Gimmix is a very simple process, just enter its directory, type make and make install. Unfortunately, installing its dependencies could cause severe head aches for most Linux beginners, probably forcing them to drop the whole process.

Gimmix requires Gtk+-2.10.x, libglade-2.6.0 or higher, libmpd-0.12.0 or higher, libnotify-0.4.x, libconfuse-2.5 and, of course, a working MPD. I'm running Fedora and unfortunately, couldn't find libmpd on any repositories, so I had to compile it from source. This was a pretty bad idea because the files needed for pkg-config were copied to a directory they shouldn't be in. So I had to manually copy libmpd.pc from /usr/local/lib/pkgconfig/ to /usr/lib/pkgconfig/. Next, I had to create a symlink from /usr/local/lib/libmpd.so.0 to /usr/lib/libmpd.so.0 just to get Gimmix running.

Now, in order to have Gimmix also playing some music, I needed MPD installed and running so I've started searching for it in the repositories, found available on Livna and installed it. By default, the music files will need to be manually added to /var/lib/mpd/music.

It was now time to run Gimmix by typing gimmix in a terminal. Because it was its first time running on this machine, I was asked for the MPD server host, port and password. I haven't touched mpd.conf so, by default, the server runs on port 6600 with no password. As for the host, I've entered the IP address of the machine MPD was installed on. The main window was pretty small but had all the functions needed for playing audio and managing the playlist. The upper part of the window had printed "Gimmix", its version (0.2 was the last version) and underneath was the player's web address. In the middle was a progress bar and finally, the lower part of the window had the play buttons: previous, play (which turns into pause while playing), stop, next, file info, repeat all, shuffle and preferences. The last button would open the preferences window which has two tabs: Options and Other settings. The first tab contains the server related options which I was asked about the first time I've opened Gimmix: host, port and password, while the second tab had two check boxes, whether to enable system tray icon and system tray notifications. Also, there was a volume bar in the far right part of the main window.

Underneath the play buttons was the Playlist toggle button, which would show or hide it. The playlist is also divided into two tabs: Playlist and Library. The Playlist contains the list of the currently scheduled for playing, while the Library tab contains the list with all the available audio files (all the files in the /var/lib/mpd/music directory). File names from Library can be added to Playlist with a simple double click or selecting it and pressing enter, while removing them from Playlist require a right click on the file name and clicking Remove. The Library tab has an update function found in the right-click menu and also a quick search feature (similar to Winamp's Jump to File function) which allows you to quickly find files in a long list.

At the bottom of the playlist, there were three buttons: add, remove or clear items to/from playlist. The same functions could be reached if the playlist section was right-clicked. My playlist was empty so I clicked the Add button, which opened a new window containing the audio files I've added earlier to /var/lib/mpd/music. To add a file to the playlist, I simply had to double click it.

The Good

Gimmix has a simple, yet nice user interface which is very intuitive and easy to use. Because it's based on MPD, you can listen to your files from any computer, as long as you have Gimmix and its requirements installed. Moreover, it has a system tray icon which enables quick and easy access to the player's controls.

The Bad

Because it's based on MPD, it also has disadvantages, the biggest one being that you can't add files to playlist from the computer you currently use. Also, listening to music files from another machine requires that you have an external IP address as the port isn't firewalled. Also, if you plan on listening only to high quality audio files such as 320kbps mp3 files or, even worse, FLAC audio files, you will need a pretty large connection bandwidth on both server and current PC.

The Truth

Overall, Gimmix is a great audio player but only for listening to music on your home Linux PC. It's small, requires very low resources and even supports systray icon integration. Unfortunately, installing its dependencies could take some time and listening to high quality audio files will require you to have large connection bandwidth. However, if you just want to listen to music already on the current PC, I'd recommend you use a normal audio player because Gimmix (more exactly MPD) only allows you to play files from the MPD music directory.

Check out some screenshots below:

http://news.softpedia.com/images/reviews/large/Gimmix_001-large.png
http://news.softpedia.com/images/reviews/large/Gimmix_002-large.png
http://news.softpedia.com/images/reviews/large/Gimmix_003-large.png
http://news.softpedia.com/images/reviews/large/Gimmix_004-large.png
http://news.softpedia.com/images/reviews/large/Gimmix_005-large.png




 

09/11/2007 GMT 1

Ubuntu Studio 8.04 released: Installation Guide for Hardy Heron

ubuntuland @ 18:52

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Ubuntu Studio is an Ubuntu-based desktop Linux distribution designed for audio, video and graphic enthusiast. It uses GNOME desktop environment and includes lots of open-source applications for multimedia creation.

For instance, Ardou, Audacity, GIMP, Inkscape, Blender, PiTiVi, Kino, Cinepaint and so on. This installation guide will help you install Ubuntu Studio 8.04 Hardy Heron.

The kernel included with Ubuntu Studio is modified for intensive audio, video or graphics work. The scheduler allows applications to request immediate CPU time, which can drastically reduce audio latency. Ubuntu Studio also includes custom artwork, a blue-on-black theme as opposed to Ubuntu's default brown and orange.

There is currently no live version available of Ubuntu Studio, and consequently, no graphical installer. In addition, the disk image is 800MB, too large to fit on a standard CD, and as a result, Ubuntu Studio is often installed from a DVD. Ubuntu Studio can also be installed via the Internet from an existing Ubuntu installation via apt.

ipod.jpg

Get Ubuntu Studio 8.04 final now.

In order to install Ubuntu Studio 8.04, you must start your computer using the installation DVD. Then using the following steps:

1. Select Install in text mode. Press ENTER to continue.

2. Choose language and country, keep default.



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3. Select you keyboard layout.

4. Configure the network, enter hostname, e.g. phorolinux.

5. Partition disks. We select Guided - use entire disk. If your disk exists data, you can select Manual.

6. Configure time zone.

7. Configure the clock.

8. Set up users and passwords.

9. Installing the base system.

10. Choose software to install.

11. Configuring xserver-xorg.

12. Finish the installation.

After restart computer, you will enter world of Ubuntu Studio.